Towards the principled design of software engineering diagrams
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on Software engineering
On Automating Diagrammatic Proofs of Arithmetic Arguments
Journal of Logic, Language and Information
Introduction: Thinking with Diagrams
Artificial Intelligence Review
Using Perceptual Syntax to Enhance Semantic Content in Diagrams
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
Multimedia design for communication of dynamic information
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: Interactive graphical communication
DIAGRAMS '02 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Diagrammatic Representation and Inference
Spatial Representation with Aspect Maps
Spatial Cognition, An Interdisciplinary Approach to Representing and Processing Spatial Knowledge
Mental Processing of Geographic Knowledge
COSIT 2001 Proceedings of the International Conference on Spatial Information Theory: Foundations of Geographic Information Science
The roots of computer supported argument visualization
Visualizing argumentation
Mental representation and processing of geographic knowledge
Diagram processing: computing with diagrams
Artificial Intelligence
Applications of heterogeneous reasoning in design
Machine Graphics & Vision International Journal - Special issue on diagrammatics & Design
Machine Graphics & Vision International Journal
The reification of metaphor as a design tool
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI)
A computational architecture for heterogeneous reasoning
Journal of Experimental & Theoretical Artificial Intelligence
Proteus: Visuospatial analogy in problem-solving
Knowledge-Based Systems
Structure Discovery from Massive Spatial Data Sets Using Intelligent Simulation Tools
Computational Discovery of Scientific Knowledge
Kantian Philosophy of Mathematics and Young Robots
Proceedings of the 9th AISC international conference, the 15th Calculemas symposium, and the 7th international MKM conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics
A Knowledge Representation Tool for Autonomous Machine Learning Based on Concept Algebra
Transactions on Computational Science V
Computational Support for Sketching in Design: A Review
Foundations and Trends in Human-Computer Interaction
IJCAI'99 Proceedings of the 16th international joint conference on Artifical intelligence - Volume 1
Journal of Symbolic Computation
Diagrammatic reasoning and cases
AAAI'96 Proceedings of the thirteenth national conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
A constraint satisfaction framework for executing perceptions and actions in diagrammatic reasoning
Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research
On signifying the complexity of inter-agent relations in agentsheets games and simulations
Proceedings of the 31st ACM international conference on Design of communication
Hi-index | 0.00 |
From the Publisher:foreword by Herbert Simon "Understanding diagrammatic thinking will be of special importance to those who design human-computer interfaces, where the diagrams presented on computer screens must find their way to the Mind's Eye. . . . In a society that is preoccupied with `Information Superhighways,' a deep understanding of diagrammatic reasoning will be essential to keep the traffic moving." -- Herbert Simon Diagrammatic reasoning -- the understanding of concepts and ideas by the use of diagrams and imagery, as opposed to linguistic or algebraic representations -- not only allows us to gain insight into the way we think, but is a potential base for constructing representations of diagrammatic information that can be stored and processed by computers. Diagrammatic Reasoning brings together recent investigations into the cognitive, the logical, and particularly the computational characteristics of diagrammatic representations and the reasoning that can be done with them. Following a foreword by Herbert Simon and an introduction by the editors, twenty-seven chapters provide an overview of the recent history of the subject, survey and extend the underlying theory of diagrammatic representation, and provide numerous examples of diagrammatic reasoning (human and mechanical) that illustrate both its powers and its limitations. Each of the book's four sections (Historical and Philosophical Background, Theoretical Foundations, Cognitive and Computational Models, and Problem Solving with Diagrams) begins with an introduction by an eminent researcher. These introductions provide interesting personal perspectives as well as place the work in the proper context. Additional information on Diagrammatic ReasoningDistributed for AAAI Press